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Plate tectonics. How the earth moves. Structure of the Earth. The Earth is made up of 3 main layers: Core (inner and outer) Mantle Crust. Mantle. Outer core. Inner core. Crust. The Crust. This is where we live! The Earth’s crust is made of:. Continental Crust
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Plate tectonics How the earth moves
Structure of the Earth • The Earth is made up of 3 main layers: • Core (inner and outer) • Mantle • Crust Mantle Outer core Inner core Crust
The Crust • This is where we live! • The Earth’s crust is made of: Continental Crust • thick (10-70km)- buoyant (less dense than oceanic crust) - mostly old Oceanic Crust - thin (~7 km)- dense (sinks under continental crust)- young
What are the tectonic plates? AKA: Lithospheric plate • The ~100-km-thick surface of the Earth; • Contains crust and part of the upper mantle; • It is rigid and brittle; • Fractures to produce earthquakes.
What is the asthenosphere? Asthenosphere: • Is the hotter upper mantle below the lithospheric plate; • Can flow like silly putty; and • Is a viscoelastic solid, NOT liquid!! USGS Graphics
CONTINENTAL DRIFT • Alfred Wegener in the early 1900’s proposed the hypothesis that continents were once joined together in a single large land mass he called Pangea (meaning “all land” in Greek). • He proposed that Pangea had split apart and the continents had moved gradually to their present positions - a process that became known as continental drift.
Wegener’s Evidence for Continental Drift Continents fit together like a puzzle….e.g. the Atlantic coastlines of Africa and South America. The Best fit includes the continental shelves (the continental edges under water.) Picture from http://www.sci.csuhayward.edu/~lstrayer/geol2101/2101_Ch19_03.pdf
Wegener’s Evidence for Continental Drift Picture from http://volcano.und.edu/vwdocs/vwlessons/plate_tectonics/part3.html Fossils of plants and animals of the same species found on different continents.
Wegener’s Evidence for Continental Drift • Rock sequences (meaning he looked at the order of rock layers) in South America, Africa, India, Antarctica, and Australia show remarkable similarities. • Wegener showed that the same three layers occur at each of these places. Picture from http://volcano.und.edu/vwdocs/vwlessons/plate_tectonics/part4.html
Seafloor Spreading • In the 1960’s, a scientist named Henry Hess made a discovery that would vindicate Wegner. • Using new technology, radar, he discovered that the seafloor has both trenches and mid-ocean ridges. • Henry Hess proposed the sea-floor spreading theory. Picture from USGS http://pubs.usgs.gov/gip/dynamic/HHH.html
Seafloor Spreading • As the seafloor spreads apart at a mid-ocean ridge, new seafloor is created. • The older seafloor moves away from the ridge in opposite directions. • This helped explain how the crust could move—something that the continental drift hypothesis could not do. Picture from http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aso/tryit/tectonics/divergent.html
Plate Tectonic Theory • Both Hess’s discovery and Wegner’s continental drift theory combined into what scientists now call the Plate Tectonic Theory. • Theory of plate tectonics: • The Earth’s crust and part of the upper mantle are broken into sections, called plates which move on a plastic-like layer of the mantle
Plate Movement • “Plates” of lithosphere are moved around by the underlying hot mantle convection cells
Convection currents/cells • Plates move by the transfer of heat through heated material. • Hot magma in the Earth moves toward the surface, cools, then sinks again. • Creates convectioncurrents beneath the plates that cause the plates to move.
HOT Spots • Stationary plumes of hot material that initiate at the core/mantle interface • Hawaii: the plume is beneath oceanic crust
Hot Spots • Yellowstone is associated with a hot spot under continental crust
Divergent Convergent Transform Three types of plate boundary
Spreading ridges As plates move apart new material is erupted to fill the gap Divergent Boundaries
Iceland: An example of continental rifting • Iceland has a divergent plate boundary running through its middle
Convergent Boundaries • There are three styles of convergent plate boundaries • Continent-continent collision • Continent-oceanic crust collision • Ocean-ocean collision
Continent-Continent Collision • Forms mountains,e.g. European Alps, Himalayas
Continent-Oceanic Crust Collision • Called SUBDUCTION
Subduction • Oceanic lithosphere subducts underneath the continental lithosphere • Oceanic lithosphere heats and dehydrates as it subsides • The melt rises forming volcanism • E.g. The Andes
Ocean-Ocean Plate Collision • When two oceanic plates collide, one runs over the other which causes it to sink into the mantle forming a subduction zone. • The subducting plate is bent downward to form a very deep depression in the ocean floor called a trench. • The worlds deepest parts of the ocean are found along trenches. • E.g. The Mariana Trench is 11 km deep!
Transform Boundaries • Where plates slide past each other • E.g. Faults and earthquakes Above: View of the San Andreas transform fault